Overview
This new volume analyzes in considerable detail the antitrust issues arising from vertical restraints and presents a comprehensive map and critical assessment of current enforcement practice in the European Union. The purpose of the book is to provide extensive guidance to practitioners, businesses, and researchers, as well as to contribute to the ongoing debate on the application of EU competition rules to distribution and other vertical agreements. The book contains thoughtful contributions written by leading practitioners and scholars from different countries, which address the general framework for assessing vertical restraints and cover a wide range of vertical practices. After discussing the pro-competitive rationale, the potential negative effects of vertical restraints, and the introduction of an economic approach by the Commission, the book examines the block exemption regulation and critically reviews the limits of the 2010 revision of EU rules on vertical restraints. It then explores in detail the enforcement practices concerning the most commonly used vertical restrictions and specific agreements entered into by firms situated at different levels of the production chain. In particular, the book provides an extensive review of the issues raised by the individual assessment of resale price restrictions, exclusive distribution and customer allocation, selective distribution, single-branding, tying, upfront access payments, and category management. Specific chapters are also devoted to franchising, agency, and sub-contracting agreements. The book's continuous references to economic analysis insights, as well as the comparisons with the experiences of other legal systems, contribute to its value and usefulness. (Series: EU Competition Law - Vol. 6)Author Biography
Mario Siragusa focuses on corporate and commercial matters, and he specializes in EU and Italian competition law and complex commercial litigation. He appears frequently before the European Court of Justice, the General Court of the European Union, the Directorate General for Competition of the European Commission, as well as the Italian Antitrust Authority and Italian civil and administrative courts.Gianluca Faella's practice focuses on competition law, State aid, economic regulation (including electronic communications, media, energy, and postal services), intellectual property, contract law, and litigation.